Ahsan Iqbal, Pakistan's Minister of Planning, National Reforms, and Development told Time, “Urdu will be a second medium of language and all official business will be bilingual.” The country will not abandon English, which will still be taught alongside Urdu in schools, he said.

Asif Ezdi, a former member of the Pakistan Foreign Service, wrote in a blog post about the importance of federal initiatives to preserve regional languages, which “must go hand in hand with the promotion of Urdu.”

Mr. Iqbal maintains the changes will help make Pakistan more democratic since it will “help provide greater participation to people who don’t know English, hence making the government more inclusive,” Time reported.

In an interview with the United Nations Development Fund, Iqbal spoke about how such accessibility is relevant in education.

“Children thinking in Urdu may face difficulties in expressing themselves in English if their classroom learning is restricted to just English. A poor command over expression translates into poorly and insufficiently expressed thoughts – early stage learning and conceptualization require free expression in both languages, and a free internalization of knowledge.”

Osama Sajid, an undergraduate student in Pakistan, wrote that most high school students in Pakistan were “unable to read even the most basic headlines from Urdu newspapers” and most chose to take Urdu, a compulsory subject, as a second language.

“The unfortunate dilemma is that we find it ‘cool’ or trendy to dissociate ourselves from it,” Sajid said. “Unless we start to take some pride in our national language, and derive a sense of belonging and unity from it, we will always be a confused nation on the brink of success, but never really there.”